Celtics’ Isaiah Thomas is ready for whatever the Wizards throw at him ‘They want to try to go at me. But we’ll be fine. I’ll be fine.’

Celtics’ Isaiah Thomas is ready for whatever the Wizards throw at him ‘They want to try to go at me. But we’ll be fine. I’ll be fine.’

After Boston Celtics guard Isaiah Thomas picked up his second foul in the opening minutes of Game 3, the Washington Wizards put him under attack.

First, Wizards guard John Wall tried to back the 5-foot-9 Thomas down. Later, Otto Porter, at 6-foot-9, took Thomas to the post and twice scored easily. One by one the Wizards took turns trying to punish him in the paint in a game so physical that Thomas had his recent dental work knocked out.

“They wanted to go at me; I can’t worry about what they’re doing,” Thomas said. “I’ll be OK.”

Of course Thomas will be OK, considering what he’s been able to overcome these past three weeks. His younger sister, Chyna Thomas, died in a car accident on April 15, the day before the Celtics’ playoff opener against Chicago.

After his high-scoring game the day after his sister’s death, Thomas flew to the Pacific Northwest to grieve with his family.

Since then he’s taken two more cross-country trips, including the flight just over a week ago to Tacoma, where he delivered the eulogy at Chyna’s funeral less than 24 hours after the Celtics clinched the opening-round series over the Bulls.

Wearing a black suit and dark sunglasses, he fought through tears as he addressed the crowd.

“When I found out the news I wanted to give up and quit, and never in my life have I ever thought about quitting,” Thomas said. “I realized quitting wasn’t an option. That’s the easy way out. I will keep going for my sister, as I know she wouldn’t want me to stop. … Everything I do for the rest of my life will be for you.”

The next day, Thomas had 33 points and nine assists, leading Boston to a 123-111 win in the series opener against the Wizards.

It’s been more than grief for Thomas. His dental work resulted from an elbow knocking out a tooth in Game 1, and landing on his face in Game 2.

Isaiah Thomas #4 of the Boston Celtics stands for a moment of silence for the National Anthem before the game against the Washington Wizards during Game Three of the Eastern Conference Semifinals of the 2017 NBA Playoffs on May 4, 2017 at Verizon Center in Washington, DC.

Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images

That led to six hours of extensive oral surgery on Wednesday, the day before Game 3, and five hours of dental treatment the next day. Thomas wasn’t on the floor at the start of the second half on Thursday because his four-piece temporary bridge was cracked in the first half and had to be replaced.

“After all he’s gone through,” said an admiring teammate, Al Horford, after the Game 2 performance, “I don’t think a lot of guys would have played. I think what he’s doing is special.”

Special is a trait Thomas has always possessed. At 10, Thomas had a skill level and confidence about his game that far exceeded his age. A highlight reel on YouTube shows that Thomas had a great deal of skill and maturity for a sixth-grader playing against inferior competition. Watching a young Thomas confidently nailing long jumpers, attacking the basket and showing flash while going behind the back to avoid defenders on the way to finishing layups, everyone who saw him knew he’d be special.

By the time he was 12, Thomas was traveling around Tacoma with his best friend, 16-year-old Curtis Terry, and playing with older kids. That bond between the two led to Thomas gaining a mentor: Terry, who later played four years at UNLV, is the younger brother of Milwaukee Bucks guard Jason Terry.

Curtis Terry would often have to vouch for his smaller friend when the two played area pickup games.

“They’d walk into gyms and everyone would ask, ‘Who’s this little guy?,’ ” Lindsay Bemis, Thomas’ basketball coach at Curtis High School in Tacoma, recalled. “Curtis would have to tell them that he wasn’t just some little kid there to shoot around. He came to play.”

When Terry later went on to star at Curtis High School, he’d bring Thomas with him when the team had Saturday practice.

While the intent of the coaches would be to watch their kids play, their eyes often shifted to the secondary court to watch Thomas shoot.

“He was this little guy, maybe 5-2, and he’d have to bring the ball from all the way down to his waist to shoot,” recalled Bemis. “But everything went in. He shot it better than the guys on our team.”

By the time Thomas arrived at Curtis he was extremely confident in his ability — and borderline cocky. As a sophomore he showed up at practice with a tattoo of the word “GOAT” written inside a coat of armor.

Thomas embraced greatness and the people who achieved that status. For one game he showed up wearing white leggings, long before the compression sleeves became fashionable. The reason? “Kobe [Bryant] had worn them a few days before,” Bemis said. “We made him take it off.”

Isaiah Thomas #4 of the Boston Celtics goes for a lay up during the game against the Washington Wizards during Game Three of the Eastern Conference Semifinals of the 2017 NBA Playoffs on May 4, 2017 at Verizon Center in Washington, DC.

Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images

Thomas wound up removing that GOAT tattoo as well. It was fake, but his growing legend in the Pacific Northwest was real.

Thomas made everyone pay, demonstrating the same dead-eye jumper and attack-the-basket mentality that he shows today.

As a sophomore in his first state tournament game, he wound up going 17-for-17 from the free-throw line. “I don’t think any of them hit the rim,” Bemis said.

The next season he had the best game of his Curtis career, evading double and triple teams on the way to scoring 51 points in a loss to Franklin High School in the Tacoma Dome.

“That game showed just how special he was,” said Terry Jenks, the athletic director at Curtis High School. “He was able to put defenses in positions they didn’t want to be in while at the same time directing traffic on the floor and putting his teammates in positions where they can be better. He was a true leader.”

With expectations high for Curtis the following season, Thomas shocked everyone by transferring to the South Kent School in Connecticut, where he focused on improving his grades so he’d be eligible for college.

The coach at South Kent, Raphael Chillious, had been impressed by Thomas from the time he first saw him at the Nike Jamboree, a camp for the nation’s top ninth- and 10th-graders.

“I saw a kid who was overly confident going against the top players in the country,” said Chillious, an instructor at the camp. “He was coming downhill every single time, in attack mode.

“He’s like that Chihuahua who barks at every dog that walks by,” Chillious added. “They don’t realize how small they are — they’re fearless because they think they’re big.”

That confidence was obvious during a practice drill not long after Thomas first got to the University of Washington.

As then-head coach Lorenzo Romar went over defensive schemes where his players identified shooter closeouts and drive closeouts, he glanced at Thomas and asked which one was he.

Then there was the 2010 NCAA Tournament game during a timeout when Marquette guard Darius Johnson-Odom was torching Washington. Thomas raised his voice in the huddle, insisting to defend Johnson-Odom. “We let him, and he shut him down the rest of the way,” Romar said. “He’s like a Swiss Army knife. At 5-9, he can do whatever needs to be done to win a game.”

Asked his favorite Thomas story, Chillious offered two. The first came at a South Kent road game. Thomas was having a monster game, and the upset opposing fans began chanting, “We hate your dad, we hate your dad …” referring to the NBA legend, Isiah Thomas, who acts as a mentor.

Thomas looked at the crowd and, in a child’s voice, replied, “That’s not my dad.”

The crowd cracked up.

Chillious also recalled the time when Washington played at Washington State — Chillious was an assistant coach at the time —and Thomas had to urinate so badly late in a tight game that he could barely walk. Washington called timeout, but Thomas refused to walk to the restroom, which was so far away he would have missed part of the game.

“He said, ‘I’m not missing any of this game, bring me a towel,’ ” Chillious remembered. “We all circled him, and he put the towel in his shorts and he peed into the towel. It shows that he’s the type of guy who will do anything to win.”

Coping with his sister’s death and his fractured teeth are more signs that Thomas will do whatever it takes to succeed. Asked whether he’s worried about requiring more surgery on his mouth if he takes another hit in this physical series, Thomas shook his head no.

“I’m staying out of the dentist’s chair,” Thomas said. “ I can’t get any permanent teeth until the season is over. You might see me with no teeth.”

Basketball, in a weird way, has served as therapy for Thomas during these difficult times. Basketball takes him away from the idleness that might yield grief in dealing with his unexpected loss.

“I worry about him because I know how close he and his sister are,” Chllious said. “For a lot of people, the arena becomes a sanctuary. I don’t know if it’s cathartic, but I do know it’s a good escape for him right now.”

That escape is coming during a series between teams with a brief history of bad blood, including a John Wall ejection for a flagrant foul against the Celtics in November and the Wizards showing up for a game against the Celtics in January wearing all black, a reference to burying Boston.

Thomas, and his mouth, are likely to be targets in Sunday’s Game 4. But Thomas — coming off his least productive game of the playoffs, during which the Wizards tried continuously to post him up — is not worried.